By Jeffrey Russell, Offensive Coordinator, Wethersfield High School (CT)

Coach Russell shares the technique he uses in his triangle read to identify and block second level players as well as the formations he’ll use to outnumber defenses on the perimeter so he doesn’t have to block them.

At Wethersfield, we’ve become a three headed monster that attacks our opponents with quick passes, perimeter runs, and run/pass concepts. To counter these strengths, defenses often will try to create a numbers advantage by having defenders be responsible for a part of the run game and a part of the pass game simultaneously. It is our goal to diagnose their strategy early in the game and then use those responsibilities against them with each of the three offenses phases I mentioned above. We assess things like:

How much of the wide side of the field or boundary a defense is willing to give up?

How many players are they willing to sacrifice vs. 3 and 4 receivers?

Which formations, be it Trips, Quads or an unbalanced variation that allows our back side receiver to motion, will best expose the defenses weak point?

Outnumbering Defenses by Alignment

Our offense moves very quickly, but we don’t want to sacrifice options to get into advantageous formations. For that reason, our skill position players have a couple of simple rules they follow in regards to know where to align. They are as follows:

1. Our receivers are labeled from X, H, Y & Z, from left to right, and they never overlap or change order. The players must be able to operate out of the different positions.

2. Our running back (R) will become the inside most receiver closest to the backfield in any of our Empty formations (3x2 or 4x1).

3. A simple hand signal will tell the widest player who’s NOT already on the line of scrimmage to move up onto the line of scrimmage. This same hand signal, will tell the single receiver on the opposite side of the formation to move OFF of the line of scrimmage, allowing him to motion.

These formation variations create issues for defensive coordinators in real time, and put the responsibility on the players on the field to make the correct adjustment.

Outnumbering Defenses with the Jet Sweep:

With all the extra blockers we get on the edge, our Jet Sweep has become a great play for us. Our Jet Sweep concept is actually a passing play for the receivers and a running play for the running back. This concept keeps the players “statistically”happy (receivers get receiving yards and running backs get rushing yards), and also puts them in the best position to be successful. When a receiver is tagged to run a jet sweep, they will run full speed jet motion and the QB will actually flip/pass the ball in front to them. This allows the receivers to do what they do best, and doesn’t force us to spend a lot of practice time on repping handoffs. This also assures us that any dropped exchange is an incomplete pass and not a fumble. This rule applies in conversely for running back. They will receive a handoff when tagged to run the Jet Sweep from the back field.

Jet Power Read:

If we face a team that does a tremendous job of getting over the top of our pullers or attacking from the second level, then we’ll start to add an interior run play to the Jet Sweep. In this case, we use a receiver in jet motion to threaten the edge instead of the running back coming across the face of the QB. We run traditional Power Read as well, but the Jet version breaks our running back alignment tendency for the defense. For obvious reasons, this play will be a hand off with the receiver and not a pass like the Jet Sweep. With that in mind, usually limit this skill to only one or two players. If the opponent’s X’s are better then our O’s at the OLB or defensive end position, then we will read that player instead of trying to block him.

Game Film: Jet Sweep and Jet Power Read

Insiders members, please login now (click here to login) and get the full-length version of Coach Russell’s clinic report. You’ll see Coach Russell’s game film on the Jet Sweep and Jet Power Read concept. Plus, you’ll also get the full-length version of this report, which includes:

How Coach Russell blocks the perimeter of Jet Sweep and why he tells his receivers to “block the most dangerous player with their body while blocking the non-threatening player with their eyes.”

The “triangle read” Coach Russell uses to instruct his receivers to block the perimeter.

How Coach Russell gets triple teams on the perimeter with Quads formation sets.

How Coach Russell handles wide 5-techniques that can quickly force the ball on Jet Sweep.

How Coach Russell will vary arc releases by the play side tackle in order to block six in the box defenders.

VIDEO: Watch game film of Coach Russell’s Jet Sweep and Jet Power Read concept.

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Conclusion:

As you can see, we have found a few ways to use our Jet Sweep concepts to get the edge on almost any alignment and we have answers to run back inside if the sell out. We feel that this set of solutions can help anyone create more of an advantage on the edge this coming year.